In this June 13, 2016 photo, Dan and Amy Thomas calm the two Friesian horses they were picking up at the York Correctional Center in Niantic, Conn. The horses were among others seized in February as part... (Susan Haigh)

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After losing sight in his right eye from a 2013 rocket attack in Afghanistan, retired Army Maj. Dan Thomas recovered with help from an equine therapy program at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, reports the AP. Hoping to help other veterans, he and his wife traveled to Connecticut last week to purchase two massive, jet black carriage horses, animals put up for auction by the state after they were seized from a breeder as part of an animal abuse investigation and rehabilitated through a state program involving female prison inmates. Thomas said the two Friesian mares—Francisca and Rosalind—are the perfect animals to help vets deal with post-traumatic stress disorder. "They know what it's like to go through hell and come out the other side," said Thomas, who plans to create a program similar to the one he experienced at the couple's 160-acre ranch in Black, Ala. The Friesians join seven other horses the couple previously rescued.

Considered a "war horse" in the Middle Ages, Friesians are a highly sought-after breed, recognized for being gentle and intelligent. Thomas knows firsthand that such a demeanor can be calming for returning combat vets. "After being blown up, it's quite a traumatic experience. The horses are what works for me. So I know it's out there and works for other people because I've seen it," Thomas said, explaining how there's peace in being around such a powerful creature that could hurt you but doesn't. The 32 horses seized in February from the Fairy Tail Equine breeding center in East Hampton attracted great attention because of the type of horses involved. Besides Friesians, Andalusian and Gypsy Vanner horses were also seized. Thomas saw photos of Francisca and Rosalind after they were seized. "I'm just really impressed with what the state of Connecticut has done here because these horses are beautiful now," he said. "The state of Connecticut has saved some lives."

this is not a calling. it is service forced upon them by selfish humans. it is species supremacisim. Every slave master in history has spun himself as benign and claimed that the slave was not human. Well horses are not human so humans do not grant them rights

AEK

Jun 19, 2016 3:30 PM CDT

If I were the religious type, I would say animals are angels in disguise, sent here by god just like the 3 sent to Sodom and Gomorrah. And just look how humans treat them. A lot of us are failing the test.

FarmerM

Jun 19, 2016 2:01 PM CDT

Horses spook at the darnest things. (I used to set competitive Western Trail routes and folks hated some of my courses, but those with well trained horses did well.) So any vet with PTSD learns to read the early sign of spook, thus gets closer to seeing it in himself. Good path. Ditto the dog programs I've seen, although they are more about love and caring (which is also part of any horse program.) Healing abused animals is a great path, as you see visual results--something the vet hasn't seen before, getting better.